A searchable database containing employment profiles of government employees and contractors is now being hosted by WikiLeaks after spawning cyberattacks and deaths threats.

The anti-secrecy organization announced on Wednesday of this week
that it will now house the ICWatch project, launched earlier this
month by the Transparency Toolkit group, amid security concerns.

As RT reported at the time, ICWatch contains resumes and personal
information lifted from the public job profiles of thousands of
individuals associated with the United States intelligence
community and the secretive spy programs waged by the likes of
the US National Security Agency.

M.C. McGrath of Transparency Toolkit stated previously that the
goal of ICWatch is to “provide a face to the surveillance
state and a better mechanism for researching and understanding
these programs.”

However, after the original site went live earlier this month,
its administrators reportedly came under fire. WikiLeaks
announced previously that it would begin hosting ICWatch this
week, and on Wednesday stated that it had been driven to make the
decision by death threats and distrusted denial-of-service, or
DDoS, assaults made against the site.

“I promise that I will kill everyone involved in your
website. There is nowhere on this earth that you will be able to
hide from me,” a supposed contractor wrote to Transparency
Toolkit after the site was launched, according to WikiLeaks.

“The death threat quoted above, sent from a US intelligence
analyst in Washington DC to the project on May 13, perhaps
perfectly encapsulates why the US intelligence community (IC)
needs to be kept under close observation,” WikiLeaks said in
a statement on Wednesday.

According to the secret spilling organization, “WikiLeaks can
shield the project from censorship and intimidation” by
assuming hosting duties from Transparency Toolkit. Additionally,
the jobs profiles already included on ICWatch has been merged
with WikiLeaks’ own search engine, allowing visitors to the
controversial whistleblower website to know peruse upwards of
8.62 million records, ranging from the LinkedIn profiles of NSA
spooks to the US State Dept. cables provided by former Army
intelligence analyst Chelsea Manning.

"I think that this information can be used to provide
contacts to existing programs to see in what situations they
might be used, what companies are using them, potentially, from
there figure out what contracts are funding them," M.C.
McGrath said in an interview to RT, adding that ICWatch will also
help "uncover new codewords, and new programs and new
activities of the intelligence community."

"I would like to use this to start conversations with the
people involved," McGrath said, "because I think that
there's been a lot of great discussion of this at the
institutional level, at the company level and at the program
level, but very few people have looked at the people involved. I
think that's a big mistake, because institutions are made out of
people and I don't think we can reform the institutions without
understanding the people within them."

ICWatch contained details lifted from 27,000 supposed
intelligence contractors when it was launched earlier this month,
and has since increased the number of listings to 139,361,
WikiLeaks said.